Alvaro Herrera [Tue, 31 Jan 2017 21:42:24 +0000 (18:42 -0300)]
Tweak catalog indexing abstraction for upcoming WARM
Split the existing CatalogUpdateIndexes into two different routines,
CatalogTupleInsert and CatalogTupleUpdate, which do both the heap
insert/update plus the index update. This removes over 300 lines of
boilerplate code all over src/backend/catalog/ and src/backend/commands.
The resulting code is much more pleasing to the eye.
Also, by encapsulating what happens in detail during an UPDATE, this
facilitates the upcoming WARM patch, which is going to add a few more
lines to the update case making the boilerplate even more boring.
The original CatalogUpdateIndexes is removed; there was only one use
left, and since it's just three lines, we can as well expand it in place
there. We could keep it, but WARM is going to break all the UPDATE
out-of-core callsites anyway, so there seems to be no benefit in doing
so.
Stephen Frost [Tue, 31 Jan 2017 21:24:11 +0000 (16:24 -0500)]
pg_dump: Fix handling of ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
In commit 23f34fa, we changed how ACLs were handled to use the new
pg_init_privs catalog and to dump out the ACL commands as REVOKE+GRANT
combinations instead of trying to REVOKE all rights always and then
GRANT back just the ones which were in place.
Unfortunately, the DEFAULT PRIVILEGES system didn't quite get the
correct treatment with this change and ended up (incorrectly) only
including positive GRANTs instead of both the REVOKEs and GRANTs
necessary to preserve the correct privileges.
There are only a couple cases where such REVOKEs are possible because,
generally speaking, there's few rights which exist on objects by
default to be revoked.
Examples of REVOKEs which weren't being correctly preserved are when
privileges are REVOKE'd from the creator/owner, like so:
ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
FOR ROLE myrole
REVOKE SELECT ON TABLES FROM myrole;
or when other default privileges are being revoked, such as EXECUTE
rights granted to public for functions:
ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES
FOR ROLE myrole
REVOKE EXECUTE ON FUNCTIONS FROM PUBLIC;
Fix this by correctly working out what the correct REVOKE statements are
(if any) and dump them out, just as we do for everything else.
Noticed while developing additional regression tests for pg_dump, which
will be landing shortly.
Stephen Frost [Tue, 31 Jan 2017 17:42:16 +0000 (12:42 -0500)]
perltidy pg_dump TAP tests
The pg_dump TAP tests have gotten pretty far from what perltidy thinks
they should be, so fix that, and in passing use long-form argument names
with arguments passed via "=" in a similar vein to 58da833.
No functional changes here, just whitespace and changing runs from
"-f" to "--file=", and similar.
Stephen Frost [Tue, 31 Jan 2017 16:17:38 +0000 (11:17 -0500)]
test_pg_dump: perltidy cleanup
As pointed out by Alvaro, we actually use perltidy on the perl scripts
in the source tree, so go back to the results of a perltidy run for the
test_pg_dump TAP script.
To make it look slightly less tragic, I changed most of the independent
arguments into long-form single arguments (eg: -f file.sql changed to be
--file=file.sql) to avoid having them confusingly split across lines due
to perltidy.
Tom Lane [Mon, 30 Jan 2017 23:42:41 +0000 (18:42 -0500)]
Simplify some long-obsolete code in hba.c's next_token().
next_token() oddly set its buffer space consumption limit to one before
the last char position in the buffer, not the last as you'd expect.
The reason is there was once an ugly kluge to mark keywords by appending
a newline to them, potentially requiring one more byte. Commit e5e2fc842
removed that kluge, but failed to notice that the length limit could be
increased.
Also, remove some vestigial handling of newline characters in the buffer.
That was left over from when this function read the file directly using
getc(). Commit 7f49a67f9 changed it to read from a buffer, from which
tokenize_file had already removed the only possible occurrence of newline,
but did not simplify this function in consequence.
Also, ensure that we don't return with *lineptr set to someplace past the
terminating '\0'; that would be catastrophic if a caller were to ask for
another token from the same line. This is just latent since no callers
actually do call again after a "false" return; but considering that it was
actually costing us extra code to do it wrong, we might as well make it
bulletproof.
Tom Lane [Mon, 30 Jan 2017 23:00:26 +0000 (18:00 -0500)]
Invent pg_hba_file_rules view to show the content of pg_hba.conf.
This view is designed along the same lines as pg_file_settings, to wit
it shows what is currently in the file, not what the postmaster has
loaded as the active settings. That allows it to be used to pre-vet
edits before issuing SIGHUP. As with the earlier view, go out of our
way to allow errors in the file to be reflected in the view, to assist
that use-case.
(We might at some point invent a view to show the current active settings,
but this is not that patch; and it's not trivial to do.)
Haribabu Kommi, reviewed by Ashutosh Bapat, Michael Paquier, Simon Riggs,
and myself
Tom Lane [Mon, 30 Jan 2017 22:15:42 +0000 (17:15 -0500)]
Add a regression test script dedicated to exercising system views.
Quite a few of our built-in system views were not exercised anywhere
in the regression tests. This is perhaps not so exciting for the ones
that are simple projections/joins of system catalogs, but for the ones
that are wrappers for set-returning C functions, the omission translates
directly to lack of test coverage for those functions.
In many cases, the reason for the omission is that the view doesn't have
much to do with any specific SQL feature, so there's no natural place to
test it. To remedy that, invent a new script sysviews.sql that's dedicated
to testing SRF-based views. Move a couple of tests that did fit this
charter into the new script, and add simple "count(*)" based tests of
other views within the charter. That's enough to ensure we at least
exercise the main code path through the SRF, although it does little to
prove that the output is sane.
More could be done here, no doubt, and I hope someone will think about
how we can test these views more thoroughly. But this is a starting
point.
Tom Lane [Mon, 30 Jan 2017 21:37:15 +0000 (16:37 -0500)]
Make psql reject attempts to set special variables to invalid values.
Previously, if the user set a special variable such as ECHO to an
unrecognized value, psql would bleat but store the new value anyway, and
then fall back to a default setting for the behavior controlled by the
variable. This was agreed to be a not particularly good idea. With
this patch, invalid values result in an error message and no change in
state.
(But this applies only to variables that affect psql's behavior; purely
informational variables such as ENCODING can still be set to random
values.)
To do this, modify the API for psql's assign-hook functions so that they
can return an OK/not OK result, and give them the responsibility for
printing error messages when they reject a value. Adjust the APIs for
ParseVariableBool and ParseVariableNum to support the new behavior
conveniently.
In passing, document the variable VERSION, which had somehow escaped that.
And improve the quite-inadequate commenting in psql/variables.c.
Daniel Vérité, reviewed by Rahila Syed, some further tweaking by me
Tom Lane [Mon, 30 Jan 2017 16:40:22 +0000 (11:40 -0500)]
Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2016j.
DST law changes in northern Cyprus (new zone Asia/Famagusta), Russia (new
zone Europe/Saratov), Tonga, Antarctica/Casey. Historical corrections for
Asia/Aqtau, Asia/Atyrau, Asia/Gaza, Asia/Hebron, Italy, Malta. Replace
invented zone abbreviation "TOT" for Tonga with numeric UTC offset; but
as in the past, we'll keep accepting "TOT" for input.
Stephen Frost [Mon, 30 Jan 2017 04:05:07 +0000 (23:05 -0500)]
Handle ALTER EXTENSION ADD/DROP with pg_init_privs
In commit 6c268df, pg_init_privs was added to track the initial
privileges of catalog objects and extensions. Unfortunately, that
commit didn't include understanding of ALTER EXTENSION ADD/DROP, which
allows the objects associated with an extension to be changed after the
initial CREATE EXTENSION script has been run.
The result of this meant that ACLs for objects added through
ALTER EXTENSION ADD were not recorded into pg_init_privs and we would
end up including those ACLs in pg_dump when we shouldn't have.
This commit corrects that by making sure to have pg_init_privs updated
when ALTER EXTENSION ADD/DROP is run, recording the permissions as they
are at ALTER EXTENSION ADD time, and removing any if/when ALTER
EXTENSION DROP is called.
This issue was pointed out by Moshe Jacobson as commentary on bug #14456
(which was actually a bug about versions prior to 9.6 not handling
custom ACLs on extensions correctly, an issue now addressed with
pg_init_privs in 9.6).
Back-patch to 9.6 where pg_init_privs was introduced.
Stephen Frost [Mon, 30 Jan 2017 04:05:07 +0000 (23:05 -0500)]
test_pg_dump TAP test whitespace cleanup
The formatting of the perl hashes used in the TAP tests for test_pg_dump
was rather horribly inconsistent and made it more difficult than it
really should have been to add new tests or adjust what tests are for
what runs, etc.
Robert Haas [Fri, 27 Jan 2017 21:22:11 +0000 (16:22 -0500)]
Refactor bitmap heap scan estimation of heap pages fetched.
Currently, we only need this logic in order to cost a Bitmap Heap
Scan. But a pending patch for Parallel Bitmap Heap Scan also uses
it to help figure out how many workers to use for the scan, which
has to be determined prior to costing. So, move the logic to
a separate function to make that easier.
Dilip Kumar. The patch series of which this is a part has been
reviewed by Andres Freund, Amit Khendekar, Tushar Ahuja, Rafia
Sabih, Haribabu Kommi, and me; it is not clear from the email
discussion which of those people have looked specifically at this
part.
Tom Lane [Fri, 27 Jan 2017 18:43:00 +0000 (13:43 -0500)]
Restructure hba.c to replace 3 parallel lists with single list of structs.
tokenize_file() now returns a single list of TokenizedLine structs,
carrying the same information as before. We were otherwise going to grow a
fourth list to deal with error messages, and that was getting a bit silly.
Tom Lane [Fri, 27 Jan 2017 03:09:34 +0000 (22:09 -0500)]
Use castNode() in a bunch of statement-list-related code.
When I wrote commit ab1f0c822, I really missed the castNode() macro that
Peter E. had proposed shortly before. This back-fills the uses I would
have put it to. It's probably not all that significant, but there are
more assertions here than there were before, and conceivably they will
help catch any bugs associated with those representation changes.
I left behind a number of usages like "(Query *) copyObject(query_var)".
Those could have been converted as well, but Peter has proposed another
notational improvement that would handle copyObject cases automatically,
so I let that be for now.
Andres Freund [Fri, 27 Jan 2017 00:47:03 +0000 (16:47 -0800)]
Use the new castNode() macro in a number of places.
This is far from a pervasive conversion, but it's a good starting
point.
Author: Peter Eisentraut, with some minor changes by me Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c5d387d9-3440-f5e0-f9d4-71d53b9fbe52@2ndquadrant.com
Andres Freund [Fri, 27 Jan 2017 00:47:03 +0000 (16:47 -0800)]
Add castNode(type, ptr) for safe casting between NodeTag based types.
The new function allows to cast from one NodeTag based type to
another, while asserting that the conversion is valid. This replaces
the common pattern of doing a cast and a Assert(IsA(ptr, type))
close-by.
As this seems likely to be used pervasively, we decided to backpatch
this change the addition of this macro. Otherwise backpatched fixes
are more likely not to work on back-branches.
On branches before 9.6, where we do not yet rely on inline functions
being available, the type assertion is only performed if PG_USE_INLINE
support is detected. The cast obviously is performed regardless.
For the benefit of verifying the macro compiles in the back-branches,
this commit contains a single use of the new macro. On master, a
somewhat larger conversion will be committed separately.
Author: Peter Eisentraut and Andres Freund Reviewed-By: Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/c5d387d9-3440-f5e0-f9d4-71d53b9fbe52@2ndquadrant.com
Backpatch: 9.2-
Alvaro Herrera [Thu, 26 Jan 2017 20:45:22 +0000 (17:45 -0300)]
Remove test for COMMENT ON DATABASE
Our current DDL only allows a database name to be specified in COMMENT
ON DATABASE, which Andrew Dunstan reports to make this test fail on the
buildfarm. Remove the line until we gain a DDL command that allows the
current database to be operated on without having the specify it by
name.
Simon Riggs [Thu, 26 Jan 2017 18:14:02 +0000 (18:14 +0000)]
Reset hot standby xmin on master after restart
Hot_standby_feedback could be reset by reload and worked correctly, but if
the server was restarted rather than reloaded the xmin was not reset.
Force reset always if hot_standby_feedback is enabled at startup.
Tom Lane [Thu, 26 Jan 2017 17:17:47 +0000 (12:17 -0500)]
Ensure that a tsquery like '!foo' matches empty tsvectors.
!foo means "the tsvector does not contain foo", and therefore it should
match an empty tsvector. ts_match_vq() overenthusiastically supposed
that an empty tsvector could never match any query, so it forcibly
returned FALSE, the wrong answer. Remove the premature optimization.
Our behavior on this point was inconsistent, because while seqscans and
GIST index searches both failed to match empty tsvectors, GIN index
searches would find them, since GIN scans don't rely on ts_match_vq().
That makes this certainly a bug, not a debatable definition disagreement,
so back-patch to all supported branches.
Report and diagnosis by Tom Dunstan (bug #14515); added test cases by me.
Tom Lane [Wed, 25 Jan 2017 18:28:38 +0000 (13:28 -0500)]
Introduce convenience macros to hide JsonbContainer header accesses better.
This improves readability a bit and may make future improvements easier.
In passing, make sure that the JB_ROOT_IS_XXX macros deliver boolean (0/1)
results; the previous coding was a bug hazard, though no actual bugs are
known.
Tom Lane [Wed, 25 Jan 2017 14:33:41 +0000 (09:33 -0500)]
Remove vestigial resolveUnknown arguments from transformSortClause etc.
There's really no situation where we don't want these unknown-to-text
conversions to happen. The alternative is failure anyway, and the one
caller that was passing "false" did so only because it expected the
case could not arise. Might as well simplify the code.
Tom Lane [Wed, 25 Jan 2017 14:27:09 +0000 (09:27 -0500)]
Make UNKNOWN into an actual pseudo-type.
Previously, type "unknown" was labeled as a base type in pg_type, which
perhaps had some sense to it because you were allowed to create tables with
unknown-type columns. But now that we don't allow that, it makes more
sense to label it a pseudo-type. This has the additional effects of
forbidding use of "unknown" as a domain base type, cast source or target
type, PL function argument or result type, or plpgsql local variable type;
all of which seem like good holes to plug.
Tom Lane [Wed, 25 Jan 2017 14:17:18 +0000 (09:17 -0500)]
Change unknown-type literals to type text in SELECT and RETURNING lists.
Previously, we left such literals alone if the query or subquery had
no properties forcing a type decision to be made (such as an ORDER BY or
DISTINCT clause using that output column). This meant that "unknown" could
be an exposed output column type, which has never been a great idea because
it could result in strange failures later on. For example, an outer query
that tried to do any operations on an unknown-type subquery output would
generally fail with some weird error like "failed to find conversion
function from unknown to text" or "could not determine which collation to
use for string comparison". Also, if the case occurred in a CREATE VIEW's
query then the view would have an unknown-type column, causing similar
failures in queries trying to use the view.
To fix, at the tail end of parse analysis of a query, forcibly convert any
remaining "unknown" literals in its SELECT or RETURNING list to type text.
However, provide a switch to suppress that, and use it in the cases of
SELECT inside a set operation or INSERT command. In those cases we already
had type resolution rules that make use of context information from outside
the subquery proper, and we don't want to change that behavior.
Also, change creation of an unknown-type column in a relation from a
warning to a hard error. The error should be unreachable now in CREATE
VIEW or CREATE MATVIEW, but it's still possible to explicitly say "unknown"
in CREATE TABLE or CREATE (composite) TYPE. We want to forbid that because
it's nothing but a foot-gun.
This change creates a pg_upgrade failure case: a matview that contains an
unknown-type column can't be pg_upgraded, because reparsing the matview's
defining query will now decide that the column is of type text, which
doesn't match the cstring-like storage that the old materialized column
would actually have. Add a checking pass to detect that. While at it,
we can detect tables or composite types that would fail, essentially
for free. Those would fail safely anyway later on, but we might as
well fail earlier.
This patch is by me, but it owes something to previous investigations
by Rahila Syed. Also thanks to Ashutosh Bapat and Michael Paquier for
review.
Tom Lane [Wed, 25 Jan 2017 13:31:31 +0000 (08:31 -0500)]
Improve speed of contrib/postgres_fdw regression tests.
Commit 7012b132d added some tests that consumed an excessive amount of
time, more than tripling the time needed for "make installcheck" for this
module. Add filter conditions to reduce the number of rows scanned,
bringing the runtime down to within hailing distance of what it was before.
Jeevan Chalke and Ashutosh Bapat, per a gripe from me
Robert Haas [Wed, 25 Jan 2017 02:53:38 +0000 (21:53 -0500)]
Be more aggressive in avoiding tuple conversion.
According to the comments in tupconvert.c, it's necessary to perform
tuple conversion when either table has OIDs, and this was previously
checked by ensuring that the tdtypeid value matched between the tables
in question. However, that's overly stringent: we have access to
tdhasoid and can test directly whether OIDs are present, which lets us
avoid conversion in cases where the type OIDs are different but the
tuple descriptors are entirely the same (and neither has OIDs). This
is useful to the partitioning code, which can thereby avoid converting
tuples when inserting into a partition whose columns appear in the
same order as the parent columns, the normal case. It's possible
for the tuple routing code to avoid some additional overhead in this
case as well, so do that, too.
It's not clear whether it would be OK to skip this when both tables
have OIDs: do callers count on this to build a new tuple (losing the
previous OID) in such instances? Until we figure it out, leave the
behavior in that case alone.
Tom Lane [Wed, 25 Jan 2017 00:02:13 +0000 (19:02 -0500)]
Use non-conflicting table names in new regression test case.
Commit 587cda35c added a test to updatable_views.sql that created
tables named the same as tables used by the concurrent inherit.sql
script. Unsurprisingly, this results in random failures.
Pick different names.
Peter Eisentraut [Tue, 24 Jan 2017 22:03:56 +0000 (17:03 -0500)]
pg_dump: Fix some schema issues when dumping sequences
In the new code for selecting sequence data from pg_sequence, set the
schema to pg_catalog instead of the sequences own schema, and refer to
the sequence by OID instead of name, which was missing a schema
qualification.
Tom Lane [Tue, 24 Jan 2017 22:06:21 +0000 (17:06 -0500)]
Allow password file name to be specified as a libpq connection parameter.
Formerly an alternate password file could only be selected via the
environment variable PGPASSFILE; now it can also be selected via a
new connection parameter "passfile", corresponding to the conventions
for most other connection parameters. There was some concern about
this creating a security weakness, but it was agreed that that argument
was pretty thin, and there are clear use-cases for handling password
files this way.
Julian Markwort, reviewed by Fabien Coelho, some adjustments by me
Robert Haas [Tue, 24 Jan 2017 21:59:18 +0000 (16:59 -0500)]
Add a SHOW command to the replication command language.
This is useful infrastructure for an upcoming proposed patch to
allow the WAL segment size to be changed at initdb time; tools like
pg_basebackup need the ability to interrogate the server setting.
But it also doesn't seem like a bad thing to have independently of
that; it may find other uses in the future.
Robert Haas and Beena Emerson. (The original patch here was by
Beena, but I rewrote it to such a degree that most of the code
being committed here is mine.)
Robert Haas [Tue, 24 Jan 2017 21:53:56 +0000 (16:53 -0500)]
Add a new DestReceiver for printing tuples without catalog access.
If you create a DestReciver of type DestRemote and try to use it from
a replication connection that is not bound to a specific daabase, or
any other hypothetical type of backend that is not bound to a specific
database, it will fail because it doesn't have a pg_proc catalog to
look up properties of the types being printed. In general, that's
an unavoidable problem, but we can hardwire the properties of a few
builtin types in order to support utility commands. This new
DestReceiver of type DestRemoteSimple does just that.
Robert Haas [Tue, 24 Jan 2017 20:46:50 +0000 (15:46 -0500)]
Fix things so that updatable views work with partitioned tables.
Previously, ExecInitModifyTable was missing handling for WITH CHECK
OPTION, and view_query_is_auto_updatable was missing handling for
RELKIND_PARTITIONED_TABLE.
Robert Haas [Tue, 24 Jan 2017 20:34:39 +0000 (15:34 -0500)]
Set ecxt_scantuple correctly for tuple routing.
In 2ac3ef7a01df859c62d0a02333b646d65eaec5ff, we changed things so that
it's possible for a different TupleTableSlot to be used for partitioned
tables at successively lower levels. If we do end up changing the slot
from the original, we must update ecxt_scantuple to point to the new one
for partition key of the tuple to be computed correctly.
Reported by Rajkumar Raghuwanshi. Patch by Amit Langote.
Robert Haas [Tue, 24 Jan 2017 15:20:02 +0000 (10:20 -0500)]
Reindent table partitioning code.
We've accumulated quite a bit of stuff with which pgindent is not
quite happy in this code; clean it up to provide a less-annoying base
for future pgindent runs.
Robert Haas [Tue, 24 Jan 2017 13:50:16 +0000 (08:50 -0500)]
Fix interaction of partitioned tables with BulkInsertState.
When copying into a partitioned table, the target heap may change from
one tuple to next. We must ask ReadBufferBI() to get a new buffer
every time such change occurs. To do that, use new function
ReleaseBulkInsertStatePin(). This fixes the bug that tuples ended up
being inserted into the wrong partition, which occurred exactly
because the wrong buffer was used.
Amit Langote, per a suggestion from Robert Haas. Some cosmetic
adjustments by me.
Reports by 高增琦 (Gao Zengqi), Venkata B Nagothi, and
Ragnar Ouchterlony.
Peter Eisentraut [Mon, 23 Jan 2017 19:00:58 +0000 (14:00 -0500)]
Fix default minimum value for descending sequences
For some reason that is lost in history, a descending sequence would
default its minimum value to -2^63+1 (-PG_INT64_MAX) instead of
-2^63 (PG_INT64_MIN), even though explicitly specifying a minimum value
of -2^63 would work. Fix this inconsistency by using the full range by
default.
Reported-by: Daniel Verite <daniel@manitou-mail.org> Reviewed-by: Michael Paquier <michael.paquier@gmail.com>
Peter Eisentraut [Mon, 23 Jan 2017 18:45:32 +0000 (13:45 -0500)]
Don't error when no system locales were found
initdb used to warn about that, but it was changed to an error in
pg_import_system_locales, but some build farm members failed because of
that. Change it back to a warning.
Alvaro Herrera [Mon, 23 Jan 2017 15:55:18 +0000 (12:55 -0300)]
Prefetch blocks during lazy vacuum's truncation scan
Vacuum truncation scan can be sped up on rotating media by prefetching
blocks in forward direction. That makes the blocks already present in
memory by the time they are needed, while also letting OS read-ahead
kick in.
The truncate scan has been measured to be five times faster than without
this patch (that was on a slow disk, but it shouldn't hurt on fast
disks.)
Author: Álvaro Herrera, loosely based on a submission by Claudio Freire
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAGTBQpa6NFGO_6g_y_7zQx8L9GcHDSQKYdo1tGuh791z6PYgEg@mail.gmail.com
Tom Lane [Mon, 23 Jan 2017 14:38:36 +0000 (09:38 -0500)]
Fix example plan in optimizer/README.
Joining three tables only takes two join nodes. I think when I (tgl)
wrote this, I was envisioning possible additional joins; but since the
example doesn't show any fourth table, it's just confusing to write
a third join node.
Tom Lane [Mon, 23 Jan 2017 14:15:49 +0000 (09:15 -0500)]
Volatile-ize some plperl variables that must survive into PG_CATCH blocks.
This appears to be necessary to fix a failure seen on buildfarm member
sittella. It shouldn't be necessary according to the letter of the C
standard, because we don't change the values of these variables within
the PG_TRY blocks; but somehow gcc 4.7.2 is dropping the ball.
Peter Eisentraut [Mon, 23 Jan 2017 13:28:39 +0000 (08:28 -0500)]
pg_dump: Fix minor memory leak
Missing a destroyPQExpBuffer() in the early exit branch. The early
exits aren't really necessary. Most similar functions just proceed
running the rest of the code zero times and clean up at the end.
Tom Lane [Sun, 22 Jan 2017 19:08:26 +0000 (14:08 -0500)]
Relocate static function declarations to be after typedefs in jsonfuncs.c.
Project style is to put things in this order, for the good and sufficient
reason that you often need the typedefs in the function declarations.
There already was one function declaration that needed a typedef, which
was randomly placed away from all the other static function declarations
in consequence. And the submitted patch for better json_populate_record
functionality jumped through even more hoops in order to preserve this
bad idea.
This patch only moves lines from point A to point B, no other changes.
Tom Lane [Sun, 22 Jan 2017 16:47:38 +0000 (11:47 -0500)]
Remove no-longer-needed loop in ExecGather().
Coverity complained quite properly that commit ea15e1867 had introduced
unreachable code into ExecGather(); to wit, it was no longer possible to
iterate the final for-loop more or less than once. So remove the for().
In passing, clean up a couple of comments, and make better use of a local
variable.
Tom Lane [Sat, 21 Jan 2017 20:15:39 +0000 (15:15 -0500)]
Fix cross-shlib linking in temporary installs on HPUX 10.
Turns out this has been broken for years and we'd not noticed. The one
case that was getting exercised in the buildfarm, or probably anywhere
else, was postgres_fdw.sl's reference to libpq.sl; and it turns out that
that was always going to libpq.sl in the actual installation directory
not the temporary install. We'd not noticed because the buildfarm script
does "make install" before it tests contrib. However, the recent addition
of a logical-replication test to the core regression scripts resulted in
trying to use libpqwalreceiver.sl before "make install" happens, and that
failed for lack of finding libpq.sl, as shown by failures on buildfarm
members gaur and pademelon.
There are two changes needed to fix it: the magic environment variable to
specify shlib search path at runtime is SHLIB_PATH not LD_LIBRARY_PATH,
and the shlib link command needs to specify the +s switch else the library
will not honor SHLIB_PATH.
I'm not quite sure why buildfarm members anole and gharial (HPUX 11) didn't
show the same failure. Consulting man pages on the web says that HPUX 11
honors both LD_LIBRARY_PATH and SHLIB_PATH, which would explain half of it,
and the rather confusing wording I've been able to find suggests that +s
might effectively be the default in HPUX 11. But it seems at least as
likely that there's just a libpq.so installed in /usr/lib on that machine;
as long as it's not too ancient, that would satisfy the test. In any case
I do not think this patch will break HPUX 11.
At the moment I don't see a need to back-patch this, since it only matters
for testing purposes, not to mention that HPUX 10 is probably dead in the
real world anyway.
Robert Haas [Fri, 20 Jan 2017 20:55:45 +0000 (15:55 -0500)]
Avoid useless respawining the autovacuum launcher at high speed.
When (1) autovacuum = off and (2) there's at least one database with
an XID age greater than autovacuum_freeze_max_age and (3) all tables
in that database that need vacuuming are already being processed by a
worker and (4) the autovacuum launcher is started, a kind of infinite
loop occurs. The launcher starts a worker and immediately exits. The
worker, finding no worker to do, immediately starts the launcher,
supposedly so that the next database can be processed. But because
datfrozenxid for that database hasn't been advanced yet, the new
worker gets put right back into the same database as the old one,
where it once again starts the launcher and exits. High-speed ping
pong ensues.
There are several possible ways to break the cycle; this seems like
the safest one.
Amit Khandekar (code) and Robert Haas (comments), reviewed by
Álvaro Herrera.
Alvaro Herrera [Fri, 20 Jan 2017 18:03:27 +0000 (15:03 -0300)]
tests: Use the right Perl operator
We were using != to compare strings, for which "ne" is the right thing.
It's not clear why it works everywhere except on Pavan's machine, but
it's clearly bogus anyway.
Author and reporter: Pavan Deolasee
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CABOikdPhsHM+pX8skoEY1_T0OtKdO1udzUj4VCjU5VEt+bj4eA@mail.gmail.com
Tom Lane [Fri, 20 Jan 2017 17:51:31 +0000 (12:51 -0500)]
Try to fix non-MSVC Windows builds in the wake of logical replication.
pgoutput evidently needs to be built without -DBUILDING_DLL. (It seems
like a pretty bad idea that these makefiles need to know exactly where
all the shlibs are in the tree, or maybe what's bad is putting them under
src/backend/. But right now is not the time to redesign that.)
Also, remove "override CPPFLAGS" in pgoutput's Makefile. I don't think
that that actually has any bad consequences, but it's certainly useless
in a directory that has no .h files, and it might be contributing to the
failure somehow.
Tom Lane [Fri, 20 Jan 2017 16:10:02 +0000 (11:10 -0500)]
Allow backslash line continuations in pgbench's meta commands.
A pgbench meta command can now be continued onto additional line(s) of a
script file by writing backslash-return. The continuation marker is
equivalent to white space in that it separates tokens.
Eventually it'd be nice to have the same thing in psql, but that will
be a much larger project.
Peter Eisentraut [Fri, 20 Jan 2017 17:00:00 +0000 (12:00 -0500)]
Paper over pg_upgrade test failure
The publication test didn't drop all the publications it was creating
when it was probably intending to do that. There is still a bug with
dependency tracking in there, but this should at least quiet down the
build farm.
Peter Eisentraut [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 17:00:00 +0000 (12:00 -0500)]
Logical replication
- Add PUBLICATION catalogs and DDL
- Add SUBSCRIPTION catalog and DDL
- Define logical replication protocol and output plugin
- Add logical replication workers
From: Petr Jelinek <petr@2ndquadrant.com> Reviewed-by: Steve Singer <steve@ssinger.info> Reviewed-by: Andres Freund <andres@anarazel.de> Reviewed-by: Erik Rijkers <er@xs4all.nl> Reviewed-by: Peter Eisentraut <peter.eisentraut@2ndquadrant.com>
Tom Lane [Fri, 20 Jan 2017 00:52:13 +0000 (19:52 -0500)]
Avoid core dump for empty prepared statement in an aborted transaction.
Brown-paper-bag bug in commit ab1f0c822: the old code here coped with
null CachedPlanSource.raw_parse_tree, the new code not so much.
Per report from Dave Cramer.
No regression test, because our core testing infrastructure doesn't
provide any easy way to exercise this path. Fortunately, the JDBC
crew test it regularly.
I'd somehow talked myself into believing that set_append_rel_size
doesn't need to worry about getting back an AND clause when it applies
eval_const_expressions to the result of adjust_appendrel_attrs (that is,
transposing the appendrel parent's restriction clauses for one child).
But that is nonsense, and Andreas Seltenreich's fuzz tester soon
turned up a counterexample. Put back the make_ands_implicit step
that was there before, and add a regression test covering the case.
Andres Freund [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 22:21:26 +0000 (14:21 -0800)]
Fix platform dependant regression output triggered by 69f4b9c85f16.
Due to the changed costing in that commit hash-aggregates started to
be used, which results in big-endian vs. little-endian output
differences. Disable hash-aggs for those tests.
Author: Andres Freund, with input from Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/22891.1484791792@sss.pgh.pa.us
Andres Freund [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 22:12:38 +0000 (14:12 -0800)]
Remove obsoleted code relating to targetlist SRF evaluation.
Since 69f4b9c plain expression evaluation (and thus normal projection)
can't return sets of tuples anymore. Thus remove code dealing with
that possibility.
This will require adjustments in external code using
ExecEvalExpr()/ExecProject() - that should neither be hard nor very
common.
Author: Andres Freund and Tom Lane
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20160822214023.aaxz5l4igypowyri@alap3.anarazel.de
Alvaro Herrera [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 21:23:09 +0000 (18:23 -0300)]
Fix race condition in reading commit timestamps
If a user requests the commit timestamp for a transaction old enough
that its data is concurrently being truncated away by vacuum at just the
right time, they would receive an ugly internal file-not-found error
message from slru.c rather than the expected NULL return value.
In a primary server, the window for the race is very small: the lookup
has to occur exactly between the two calls by vacuum, and there's not a
lot that happens between them (mostly just a multixact truncate). In a
standby server, however, the window is larger because the truncation is
executed as soon as the WAL record for it is replayed, but the advance
of the oldest-Xid is not executed until the next checkpoint record.
To fix in the primary, simply reverse the order of operations in
vac_truncate_clog. To fix in the standby, augment the WAL truncation
record so that the standby is aware of the new oldest-XID value and can
apply the update immediately. WAL version bumped because of this.
No backpatch, because of the low importance of the bug and its rarity.
Author: Craig Ringer Reviewed-By: Petr Jelínek, Peter Eisentraut
Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAMsr+YFhVtRQT1VAwC+WGbbxZZRzNou=N9Ed-FrCqkwQ8H8oJQ@mail.gmail.com
Peter Eisentraut [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 17:00:00 +0000 (12:00 -0500)]
initdb: Fix for mixed-case superuser names
The previous coding did not properly quote the user name before casting
it to regrole. To avoid all that, just pass in BOOTSTRAP_SUPERUSERID
numerically.
Also fix one place where the BOOTSTRAP_SUPERUSERID was hardcoded as 10.
Robert Haas [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 18:56:13 +0000 (13:56 -0500)]
Fix some problems in check_new_partition_bound().
Account for the fact that the highest bound less than or equal to the
upper bound might be either the lower or the upper bound of the
overlapping partition, depending on whether the proposed partition
completely contains the existing partition or merely overlaps it.
Also, we need not continue searching for even greater bound in
partition_bound_bsearch() once we find the first bound that is *equal*
to the probe, because we don't have duplicate datums. That spends
cycles needlessly.
Amit Langote, per a report from Amul Sul. Cosmetic changes by me.
Robert Haas [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 18:20:11 +0000 (13:20 -0500)]
Fix RETURNING to work correctly with partition tuple routing.
In ExecInsert(), do not switch back to the root partitioned table
ResultRelInfo until after we finish ExecProcessReturning(), so that
RETURNING projection is done using the partition's descriptor. For
the projection to work correctly, we must initialize the same for each
leaf partition during ModifyTableState initialization.
Robert Haas [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 17:30:27 +0000 (12:30 -0500)]
Fix failure to enforce partitioning contraint for internal partitions.
When a tuple is inherited into a partitioning root, no partition
constraints need to be enforced; when it is inserted into a leaf, the
parent's partitioning quals needed to be enforced. The previous
coding got both of those cases right. When a tuple is inserted into
an intermediate level of the partitioning hierarchy (i.e. a table
which is both a partition itself and in turn partitioned), it must
enforce the partitioning qual inherited from its parent. That case
got overlooked; repair.
Stephen Frost [Thu, 19 Jan 2017 17:06:21 +0000 (12:06 -0500)]
Dump sequence data based on the TableDataInfo flag
When considering a sequence's Data entry in dumpSequenceData, we were
actually looking at the sequence definition's dump flag to decide if we
should dump the data or not. That's generally fine, except for when the
sequence data entry was created by processExtensionTables() because it's
a config sequence. In that case, the sequence itself won't be marked as
dumping data because it's part of an extension, leading to the need for
processExtensionTables() to create the sequence data entry.
This leads to extension config sequence data not being included in the
dump when it should be. Fix this by looking at the sequence data's dump
flag instead, just as dumpTableData() was doing for tables (which is why
config tables were correctly being handled), and add a regression test
to make sure we don't break it moving forward.
All of this is a bit round-about since we can now represent which
components of a given dump item should be dumped out through the dump
flag. A future improvement might be to change checkExtensionMembership()
to check for config sequences/tables and set the dump flag based on that
directly, possibly removing the need for processExtensionTables().